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>View discussions about this entry Country: India
Organization: mission bhartoyam
Sector Focus - Civil society
Year the initative began (yyyy) - 2007
Positioning in the Mosaic of solutions
What is your signature innovation, your new idea, in one sentence? -
rehabilitation should be profitable. Describe your innovation. What makes your idea unique and different than others doing work in the field? - the method to rehabilitate should be reformed and should be profitable because most of the workers are doing slavery only because of their poverty.So movement should be there to provide some financial support to them/their family with all other facilities so that they should get involved themselves in natural/normal life after rehabilitation.
Delivery Model: How do you implement your innovation and apply it to the challenge/problem you are addressing? - I will categories the children according to their family condition,mental ability,nature,behavior,skill sets,and health and then organize various teams which will fullfill various tasks which include their social ,mental.intellectual,spiritual,physical status and these works will also give them profit in terms of money and scholorships as well as upliftment of their self confidence,self respect,independency and social status.
How do you plan to grow your innovation? - as above described
Do you have any existing partnerships, and if so, how do you create them? - no.but partnerships may create by our own efforts only.
Provide one sentence describing your impact/intended impact. - improved self respect,social status and natural interest after rehabilitation.
How many people have you served or plan to serve? - plan to serve small batches of 20 each.
Please list any other measures of the impact of your innovation? - yes ,we can measure in terms of revenue generated from them for their own.
Exactly who are the beneficiaries of your innovation? - child labours,street children,child beggars and their families
How is your initiative financed (or how do you expect your initiative will be financed)? - expecting from govt. agencies and corporate groups
If known, provide information on your finances and organization - Annual budget;
Annual revenue generated; Number of staff: This field has not been completed. (166 words or less) What is the potential demand for your innovation? - govt and corporate support and some public awreness.
What are the main barriers to financial sustainability? - This field has not been completed. (83 words or less)
What is the origin of this innovation? Tell us your story. - it came from heart and it is a strong feeling of not only mine but most of the people.
Please provide a personal bio. Note this may be used in Changemakers marketing material - we "mission bhartiyam" a registered group of youths focussing social problems and planning and working to remove them and their causes.we want to spread our social reformation programme world wide for the benefitt of those who are victim of any type.because:the spirit never ends.......................
Contact Information:
ravi nitesh
student/social worker mission bhartoyam (NGO) Discussions about this entry |

you are doing a very good job. it will defenitly encourage the other student, specially those who are destroy their golden age due to the drugs.
Hello Ravi,
There is a lot of interest in your plan for rehabilitation. Unfortunately your entry form is very sparse and we need a lot more information in order to understand the work that you're doing. It would be great if you could incorporate some of the feedback and improve upon your entry form.
Thank you.
Dana Frasz
Ashoka's Changemakers
Hi Ravi;
I think you have some great ideas here and I was excited to read an entry that understood the importance of providing survivors of trafficking with new opportunities for their futures, especially one that focused on providing survivors with viable economic opportunities. Great job!
In your entry you say that you will categorize people in terms of their "family condition, mental ability, nature, behavior, skill sets, and health." I would suggest that you explain this fuller. Why are you organizing people in this way? Do you consider some people more at risk to being re-trafficked than others? Do you envision different groups needing different types of services?
Also, I think it would be helpful to think about how you might identify your target beneficiaries. Will your program provide services for survivors of any type of forced labor survivor or will it focus on a sub-set of people, for example children, survivors of sex trafficking, men who are forced to work in agriculture, etc.
Good Luck!
Public Health and Trafficking Specialist
Hello,
I was quite excited to read your entry. Having seen some of the rehabiliation programs available for human trafficking and child labor survivors, I believe that there are critical and urgent needs to provide well-developed programs them. There seems to be a huge gap in terms of the needs of survivors both in terms of practical skills training and income-generating opportunities, as well as psychological, social, and emotional needs.
In fact, many safe houses operate well under a required operating budget that falls short of providing regular meals to survivors of human trafficking and child labor, let alone affording counseling expertise and providing seed money for meaningful work.
I want to echo the last commentator's suggestions to specify the types of activities that you would plan on engaging survivors in. If you have not yet articulated those activities, I would suggest you consider activities that would provide survivors of human trafficking and forced labor with opportunities to play in a safe environment, build friendships, and receive much needed counseling from a licensend professional who specializes in this area. I would also suggest that you think about sustainable income-generating activities that include real skills training taking into consideration the local economy into which the survivors will become integrated.
I cannot tell you how disappointing it is to walk into a shelter where it is being boasted that teenage girls are being taught hairdressing skills- only to find out that 85% were engaged in hair dressing BEFORE being trafficked, indicating that that specific skill is not a sustainable income-generating skill that will result in real change in her life. There does need to be a huge shift in the way we look at rehabilitation so that we can provide meaningful services to survivors as opposed to providing them with skills that previously contributed to their vulnerability in an unsustainable economic activity.
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Gender Equality and Human Trafficking Specialist
Hi Ravi,
Congratulations on your entry. You are probably right that rehabiliations programmes should be reformed, although I do not know the details. What most struck me about your plan was to generate financial support for the at risk groups. I would suggest that you further elaborate this part of your entry. What activities would you concretly organize, how would it be marketed, how much people would be able to sustain themselves with these incomes and be kept safe from slavery, questions like that.
Perhaps for inspiration you can look at this website: www.fairmail.info. Something to cooperate on in India soon?
Greetings from Peru, peter
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Peter den Hond
Director FairMail Cards
www.fairmail.info
peter@fairmail.info
yes govenment should introduce some strict laws to make shure that the hundred percent of the help should be given to the victims.
on the other hand we should also have to come out with some solutions that how to make situations better for them.
for this we need some valendiers to help out the people.
Aishwarya Gupta
Manager
RIL
Member
Mission Bhartiyam
yes,rehabilitation programme should be reformed by govt.
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Ravi Nitesh
student:university of petroleum & energy studies,
dehradun(Uttarakhand)-INDIA
member
MISSION BHARTIYAM
INDIA